Home / Fantasy / The God of Thunder / CHAPTER 4 The Weight of Kemi
CHAPTER 4 The Weight of Kemi
Author: CreativeMind
last update2026-01-29 21:48:33

Nobody asked if Kemi was afraid.

Nobody ever did.

She had been a palace servant since the age of twelve — invisible in the way that useful people become invisible. She carried trays, pressed garments, memorized schedules, swallowed opinions. She learned early that the palace did not need her feelings. It needed her hands.

So she gave it her hands.

And when the night the thunder wept took everything from her — the palace, the king she respected, the queen she loved quietly from a distance, the life she had known for twenty years — nobody asked if she was afraid then either.

She simply ran.

Because that was what her hands were told to do.

The mountain was not what she had imagined sacred places to be.

She had expected peace. Stillness. The kind of silence that healed.

Instead, Oke-Àrá was cold in a way that lived inside the bones. The wind did not blow — it pressed. The trees did not sway — they leaned, as though listening for something she could not hear. At night, sounds moved through the dark that had no names in any language she knew.

She did not sleep for the first three days.

She could not. Every time her eyes closed, she heard it again.

Steel. Screaming. The specific sound a torch makes when it hits something it should not burn.

She would open her eyes and check the child.

Omogun always slept peacefully. Deeply. As though the mountain recognized him and held him gently while it pressed against her.

She resented this, briefly, in the honest part of herself she never showed anyone.

Then she felt ashamed for resenting a five year old boy who had just watched his parents die.

Then she checked him again, pulled his covering tighter, and sat back against the cave wall to wait for morning.

The spirits did not speak to her after the first night.

They spoke to Omogun. They circled Omogun. Their vast attention moved toward Omogun like water finding its level.

She understood. He was the crown prince. He carried thunder in his blood. She was a servant who happened to be present.

But understanding a thing and feeling it peacefully are different matters entirely.

One evening, in the third week, while Omogun trained with the Spirit of Strength in the upper chamber, Kemi sat alone at the mountain's edge and allowed herself the one luxury she had been denying — she cried.

Not gracefully. Not quietly.

She pressed both hands over her mouth and wept the way people weep when they have been strong for so long that the strength itself becomes a kind of grief.

She cried for the queen, who had once pressed a warm cloth to Kemi's forehead when she fell sick with fever and told no one — because queens were not supposed to tend to servants, and Kemi was not supposed to be seen as anything worth tending to.

She cried for the life she would never return to. The small room behind the kitchen that was hers alone. The other servants she had bickered with and loved in equal measure. The sound of the harvest drums. The smell of the palace at dawn when the cooks started fires and the whole world smelled briefly like possibility.

She cried because she was thirty-one years old and alone on a mountain and the only person who needed her was five years old and did not fully understand yet that his mother was not coming back.

She cried until there was nothing left.

Then she wiped her face with the hem of her wrapper.

Straightened her back.

And went to prepare the child's evening meal.

"You are sad," Omogun said that night.

He was watching her from across the small fire, his chin resting on his knees. His eyes — those strange eyes that sometimes flickered silver when thunder moved above — were very still and very old for a five year old face.

Kemi kept her expression calm. "I am tired."

"You were crying."

She looked at him. He looked back.

"Yes," she said finally. "I was."

He was quiet for a moment. The fire crackled between them.

"I cry at night too," he said. "When I think you are sleeping."

Something moved through her chest that she had no word for.

"I know," she said softly. "I hear you."

Another silence. Longer this time.

"Kemi," he said. "Are you going to leave?"

The question landed like a stone in still water.

She set down what she was holding. She moved around the fire and sat beside him — close, the way she had seen Queen Titilayo sit beside him on palace evenings. She put her arm around his small shoulders and felt him lean into her the way children lean when they are too tired to pretend they are not afraid.

"I am not going anywhere," she said.

"Promise?"

She pressed her lips to the top of his head.

"On my life," she said. "And my life is worth something. Remember that."

Thunder murmured above the mountain — gentle, almost tender.

Omogun nodded against her side.

Within minutes he was asleep.

Kemi stayed awake, watching the fire burn low.

The Spirit of Patience found her there before dawn.

Sùúrù was the quietest of the seven — a presence more than a form, like the feeling of a held breath. When it spoke, the words arrived already settled, the way truth does when it has been waiting a long time.

"You are afraid he will not remember you," Sùúrù said.

Kemi did not startle. She had grown used to the spirits appearing without warning. She had not grown used to them seeing clearly.

"He will be a king," she said. "Kings do not remember servants."

"His father remembered every servant by name."

She had no answer for that.

"You did not come to this mountain by accident," Sùúrù continued. "You were chosen the same night he was. Not for power. For something rarer."

"What is rarer than power?"

The spirit was quiet for a moment.

"Constancy," it said finally. "Anyone can fight for a prince. Very few can simply stay."

The fire had burned to embers. The mountain breathed around them.

"Will it be worth it?" Kemi asked. The question she had never allowed herself before. "Twenty years. Will it be worth what it costs?"

Sùúrù did not answer immediately.

When it spoke, it said only this:

"The woman who stays will be remembered longer than the kings who fall."

Kemi thought about that for a long time.

Then she added wood to the fire.

Then she began preparing for the day.

She kept a small cloth in the folds of her wrapper — red, worn thin at the edges.

She had picked it up the night everything ended. It had been lying in the courtyard near the east gate, abandoned in the chaos. She recognized it immediately — the ribbon the craftsman's daughter wore in her hair.

The girl who had sat beside Omogun on the palace steps the evening before the world ended.

She did not know why she kept it.

Perhaps because it was the last ordinary thing. The last piece of an evening when children still laughed and the worst thing in the world was bedtime.

Sometimes, when the mountain felt too heavy and the silence too complete, she would take it out and hold it.

It reminded her that the world beyond the mountain still existed.

That somewhere out there, a little girl with bright eyes and a red ribbon was growing up — completely unaware that a boy had once promised to always be there for her.

He will keep that promise, Kemi thought.

I will make sure of it.

She folded the ribbon carefully.

Tucked it back against her heart.

And went to wake the prince.

In the palace of Egba, Chief Akinwale stood before Adewole with trembling hands.

"The diviner's bowl shattered again," he said. "The third one this month."

Adewole said nothing. He stood at the window, looking toward the distant mountains.

"It means the child lives," Akinwale continued. "It means—"

"I know what it means," Adewole said quietly.

He was quiet for a long time.

"Double the tax on the mountain villages," he said finally. "Starve the paths. Cut the trade routes. If the boy is alive—" he turned from the window, his eyes cold as verdict— "he will need people. And people need food."

He smiled slowly.

"Let us see how long a hidden prince survives when the world around him is hungry."

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